Abstract
The MitraClip technique has been increasingly used for correction of
mitral valve regurgitation in patients in whom surgical mitral repair is
considered contraindicated or very risky, but off label use occurs
often. Failure of the procedure, translated into moderate to severe
rates of residual or recurrent mitral regurgitation, is observed in up
to one-third of the patients, and surgery has been used to correct it in
a number of cases, in what can be called an “operation for the
inoperable”. That is precisely the subtitle of a paper published in
this issue of the JOCS by Gerfen and colleagues, who analyse their
institutional experience with a series of 17 patients. In this
Editorial, I comment on this series and the possible reasons for failure
of the MitraClip, and on the indications for reintervention and its
constraints, which I hope can contribute to the discussion about
“further exploration and refinement of patient selection criteria and
identify predictors for MitraClip failure”, as the authors suggest.